A little girl with huge dark eyes and a pink shirt gone gray at the collar stands there clutching a stuffed rabbit by one ear. Sofi. Three years old. Too thin, too watchful, and already carrying the posture of children who learned early that adults can change temperature without warning.
“Mami?” she says.
You kneel before she can see the hesitation in your face.
The first thing that hits you is how carefully she studies you. Not just a child greeting her mother, but a small person taking inventory of tone, smell, mood, danger. When she wraps her arms around your neck, you understand with sudden fury that a three-year-old should never hug like someone checking whether today is safe.
“Yes, baby,” you whisper.
She pulls back and frowns.
“You sound weird.”
You almost smile.
Children are ruthless little witnesses, and honesty lives in them long before politeness. You smooth her hair and tell her your throat hurts, that the hospital air felt strange and dry, and she accepts it because she is three and because children in violent homes learn to accept incomplete answers if they sound gentle enough.
From the hallway, a woman’s voice cuts in sharp as broken glass.
“Are you planning to stand outside all day?”
That will be Teresa, Damián’s mother.
She sits at the dining table wearing a housedress, red lipstick, and the expression of someone personally offended by the existence of other women. Beside her is Damián’s sister, Verónica, scrolling through her phone with the lazy cruelty of people who outsource the dirtiest work to the strongest bully in the room and then enjoy the leftovers.
Teresa looks you up and down.w